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Following his recently expanded The Problem of the Essential Indexical and Other Essays, John Perry develops a reflexive-referential' account of indexicals, demonstratives and proper names. On these issues the philosophy of language in the twentieth century was shaped by two competing traditions, descriptivist and referentialist.

Oddly, the classic referentialist texts of the 1970s by Kripke, Donnellan, Kaplan and others were seemingly refuted almost a century earlier by co-reference and no-reference problems raised by Russell and Frege. Perry's theory, borrowing ideas from both traditions as well as from Burks and Reichenbach, diagnoses the problems as stemming from a fixation on a certain kind of content, coined referential or fully incremental.

Referentialist tradition is portrayed as holding that indexicals contribute content that involves individuals without identifying conditions on them; descriptivist tradition is portrayed as holding that referential content does not explain all of the identifying conditions conveyed by names and indexicals. Perry reveals a coherent and structured family of contents — from reflexive contents that place conditions on their actual utterance to fully incremental contents that place conditions only on the objects of reference — reconciling the legitimate insights of both traditions.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

Reference and Reflexivity is a great introduction to the semantics and pragmatics of language. It complements Korta and Perry's Critical Pragmatics,Perry's Knowledge, Possibility, and Consciouness, and Perry's forthcoming Meaning and the Self. But why doesn't Amazon offer the second edition yet?

More About the Author

I teach philosophy. I am a professor emeritus at Stanford, and a half-time professor at the University of California, Riverside. I co-host a radio program, Philosophy Talk, with my friend and Stanford colleague Ken Taylor. I have three grown children, and ten grandchildren, the youngest of whom is now fifteen. I live in California, in the Bay Area, with Frenchie, my wife of fifty years. Sites for more about Philosophy Talk, Structured Procrastination, and my work in philosophy: